Summary Care Records (SCR)

The SCR is an electronic record of important patient information, created from GP medical records. It can be seen and used by authorised staff in other areas of the health and care system involved in the patient's direct care.

Access to SCR information means that care in other settings is safer, reducing the risk of prescribing errors. It also helps avoid delays to urgent care.

At a minimum, the SCR holds important information about;

current medication

allergies and details of any previous bad reactions to medicines

the name, address, date of birth and NHS number of the patient

The patient can also choose to include
additional information in the SCR, such as details of long-term conditions, significant medical history, or specific communications needs.

Using SCR

SCR for patients

If you are registered with a GP practice in England your SCR is created automatically, unless you have opted out. 98% of practices are now using the system. You can talk to your practice about
including additional information to do with long term conditions, care preferences or specific communications needs.

GP information on creating SCRs and including additional information

The SCR is created automatically through clinical systems in GP practices and uploaded to the
Spine. It will then be updated automatically. When new patients are registered the practice should check they are happy to have an SCR. A
sample letter for new patients [151.19KB] is available. Additional information can be added to the SCR, with express patient consent, by the GP. The additional information dataset can be included automatically by changing the patient's consent status.

From 1 July 2017, the General Medical Services (GMS) contract requires GPs to identify patients with moderate or severe frailty, and promote the inclusion of additional information in the SCRs of those with severe frailty by seeking their consent to add it. NHS Digital have sent a resource pack,
Supporting Guidance for promoting enriched Summary Care Records for patients with frailty [480.53KB] , to CCGs, to be distributed to GP practices, containing support and guidance on their new duties and how to include additional information in SCRs.

Viewing SCRs

The SCR can be viewed by health and care staff, and viewing is now being rolled out to community pharmacies. SCRs can be viewed through clinical systems or through the SCRa web viewer, from a machine logged in to the secure NHS network, using a
smartcard with the appropriate Role Based Access Control codes set.

Security and the SCR

Data within the SCR is protected by secure technology. Users must have a
smartcard with the correct codes set. Each use is recorded. A patient can ask to see the record of who has looked at their SCR, from the viewing organisation. This is called a 'Subject Access Request'.

Patient data is protected by strict
information governance rules and procedures. Each organisation using the SCR has at least one privacy officer who is responsible for monitoring access and can generate audits and reports.

A patient can also opt out of having an SCR by returning a completed opt-out form to their GP practice.

B: Clinicians in urgent and emergency care settings can access key GP-held information for patients previously identified by GPs as most likely to present in urgent and emergency care) (SCR with additional information)

We're responsible for recording data related to the deployment of systems and services across health and social care systems in England. On this page you'll find links to management information dashboards containing this data.